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1.
Exposure of kidney brush-border membrane vesicles to the acylating reagent diethylpyrocarbonate resulted in inactivation of the glucose transporter, as demonstrated by inhibition of sodium-coupled D-glucose transport and phlorizin binding. The transport site(s) was protected against inactivation by the simultaneous presence of sodium ions and D-glucose, and were partially protected by phlorizin. Transport activity was not restored by hydroxylamine; this rules out the possibility of diethylpyrocarbonate interaction with histidine, serine or tyrosine transporter residues. Dithiothreitol, a thiol protector, slightly prevented diethylpyrocarbonate inactivation. It is therefore suggested that (an) amino group(s) in the translocation complex is involved, at the level of the sugar transport site and the preferential protection of D-glucose against diethylpyrocarbonate inactivation related to a conformation change caused by the simultaneous binding of sodium and D-glucose to the cotransporter.  相似文献   

2.
The phlorizin binding properties of luminal membrane vesicles isolated from the LLC-PK1 cells, a continuous epithelial cell line derived from pig kidney, are studied. Scatchard analysis of this binding indicates the existence of a single high affinity sodium-dependent site with KD = 0.4 microM at 266 mM sodium. The specificity properties of this site indicate that it represents the binding of phlorizin to the hexose binding site of the sodium-dependent D-glucose transporter previously identified in this cell line. Both phlorizin equilibrium binding and the rate of phlorizin binding were found to be sigmoidal functions of sodium concentration. A Hill analysis of these data was consistent with a sodium:phlorizin stoichiometry of 2:1 in good agreement with the sodium:glucose stoichiometry already established in these cells. Phlorizin dissociation was also found to be sodium-dependent. On the basis of the phlorizin binding data presented here, a number of models of the binding of phlorizin and sodium to the transporter can be excluded. An analysis of a random binding model consistent with the data is presented. The significance of the LLC-PK1 sodium-dependent D-glucose transporter as a model system for related renal and intestinal transporters is discussed.  相似文献   

3.
Escherichia coli H+-ATPase (ECF1) was inactivated in a time- and concentration-dependent manner by N-ethoxycarbonyl-2-ethoxy-1,2-dihydroquinoline (EEDQ), a selective carboxyl group reagent. Among the subunits of ECF1, only the beta subunit was modified by EEDQ. The reaction of 1 mol of EEDQ per mol of ECF1 resulted in total inactivation, in spite of the fact that the enzyme possesses three beta subunits.  相似文献   

4.
R Addison  G A Scarborough 《Biochemistry》1986,25(14):4071-4076
The carboxyl group activating reagent N-(ethoxycarbonyl)-2-ethoxy-1,2-dihydroquinoline (EEDQ) interacts with the Neurospora plasma membrane H+-ATPase in at least three different ways. This reagent irreversibly inhibits ATP hydrolysis with kinetics that are pseudo-first-order at several concentrations of EEDQ, and an appropriate transform of these data suggests that 1 mol of EEDQ inactivates 1 mol of the H+-ATPase. Inhibition probably involves activation of an ATPase carboxyl group followed by a nucleophilic attack by a vicinal nucleophilic functional group in the ATPase polypeptide chain, resulting in an intramolecular cross-link. The enzyme is protected against EEDQ inhibition by MgATP in the presence of vanadate, a combination of ligands that has previously been shown to "lock" the H+-ATPase in a conformation that presumably resembles the transition states of the enzyme phosphorylation and dephosphorylation reactions, but is not protected by the substrate analogue MgADP, which is consistent with the notion that one or both of the residues involved in the EEDQ-dependent inhibitory intramolecular cross-linking reaction normally participate in the transfer of the gamma-phosphoryl group of ATP, or are near those that do. The ATPase is also labeled by the exogenous nucleophile [14C]glycine ethyl ester in an EEDQ-dependent reaction, and the labeling is diminished in the presence of MgATP plus vanadate. However, peptide maps of [14C]glycine ethyl ester labeled ATPase demonstrate that the labeling is not related to the EEDQ inhibition reaction in any simple way.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

5.
The Inhibitory effect of N-ethoxycarbonyl-2-ethoxy-1,2-dihydroquinoline (EEDQ), a hydrohobic carboxyl modifying reagent, on the N,N'-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide (DCCD)-sensitive Na+/H(+)-antiporter in Archaebacterial H. halobium, was studied. The inhibition time course suggests that a single carboxyl residue is modified by EEDQ. The profile of pH dependence of EEDQ effect and the competitive binding of [14C]-DCCD and EEDQ indicate that EEDQ does not compete with DCCD for the same site but modifies one of the two functional H+ binding sites previously reported [Murakami and Konishi (1989) Arch. Biochem. Biophys. 271, 515-523].  相似文献   

6.
J E Lever 《Biochemistry》1984,23(20):4697-4702
Apical membrane vesicles isolated from a continuous renal cell line, LLC-PK1, catalyze electrogenic Na+-stimulated hexose transport and Na+-dependent binding of 3H-labeled 1-[2-(beta-D-glucopyranosyloxy)-4, 6-dihydroxyphenyl]-3-(4-hydroxyphenyl)-1-propanone [( 3H]phlorizin), a competitive ligand of this transport system. Phlorizin was not itself transported across the membrane and thus can serve as a probe of the binding step. The stoichiometry of Na+-dependent phlorizin binding in vesicles was 1:1, whereas Na+/hexose cotransport in vesicles exhibited a 2:1 stoichiometry. Na+ increased the affinity of phlorizin binding without affecting the total number of binding sites. An increased number of Na+-dependent phlorizin binding sites was observed under conditions of interior-negative membrane potential. These results are consistent with a model of the Na+/glucose cotransport cycle in which the unloaded transporter is negatively charged and its orientation influenced by membrane potential. Glucose and one sodium ion interact with the transporter, resulting in an uncharged complex. Binding of a second sodium ion triggers translocation of glucose and both sodium ions via formation of a loaded carrier complex bearing a single positive charge.  相似文献   

7.
Skeletal-muscle UDP-glucose pyrophosphorylase is inactivated by reaction with 2-ethoxy-N-(ethoxy-carbonyl)-1,2-dihydroquinoline (EEDQ) and 1-(3-dimethylaminopropyl-3-ethylcarbodi-imide (EDAC), two reagents specific for carboxylate groups. The former reagent is a more effective inactivator than EDAC. Although no evidence of reversible enzyme-reagent complexes of the affinity-labelling type was obtained by kinetic analysis of the inactivation, the selective protection of UDP-glucose pyrophosphorylase activity against inactivation by EEDQ in the presence of uridine substrates is indicative of an active-site-directed effect. The results are consistent with the hypothesis that EEDQ modifies a single carboxylate group located in a hydrophobic domain close to the substrate-binding site, leading to enzyme inactivation. In contrast, the reaction between UDP-glucose pyrophosphorylase and EDAC appears to involve a different region of the enzyme.  相似文献   

8.
The energy-linked nicotinamide nucleotide transhydrogenase (TH) purified from bovine heart mitochondria is inhibited by the carboxyl group modifiers, N,N'-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide (DCCD) and N-(ethoxycarbonyl)-2-ethoxy-1,2-dihydroquinoline (EEDQ). With either reagent, complete activity inhibition corresponds to modification of one carboxyl group per 2 mol (monomers) of this dimeric enzyme, suggesting half-site reactivity toward DCCD and EEDQ [D. C. Phelps, and Y. Hatefi (1984) Biochemistry 23, 4475-4480; 6340-6344]. It has also been shown in the former reference that DCCD appears to modify TH at the NAD(H)-binding site. The present paper presents data suggesting that EEDQ also binds at or near the NAD(H)-binding domain of TH, but at a site not identical to that of DCCD: TH modified with and inhibited approximately 85% by EEDQ could be further labeled with [14C]DCCD to the extent of 70% of the maximum in the same time period that unmodified TH was modified by [14C]DCCD to near saturation (1 mol DCCD/TH dimer); DCCD-modified TH did not bind to NAD-agarose, while EEDQ-modified TH showed partial affinity for NAD-agarose; 5'-AMP completely protected TH against modification by DCCD, but showed only a weak protective effect against EEDQ; by contrast, NMNH, which is a TH substrate and binds to the NADH site, did not protect TH against DCCD, but completely protected the enzyme against attack by EEDQ. The results are consistent with the possibility that DCCD modifies TH where the 5'-AMP moiety of NAD(H) binds, while EEDQ modifies the enzyme where the NMN(H) moiety of NAD(H) resides.  相似文献   

9.
The carboxyl group reagents dicyclohexylcarbodiimide (DCCD) and N-ethoxycarboxyl-2-ethoxy-1,2-dihydroquinoline (EEDQ) inactivate the soluble Rhodospirillum rubrum F1-ATPase (RrF1). The inactivation is both time- and concentration-dependent and also pH-dependent, being more marked at acid pH. Under the same conditions, N-ethyl-5-phenylisoxazolium 3'-sulfonate causes almost no inactivation of the RrF1-ATPase. Complete inhibition of the enzyme activity requires the binding of 1 mol of DCCD/mol of RrF1. The isolated, reconstitutively active, beta-subunit of RrF1 is affected by the three carboxyl group reagents in a very similar manner to the RrF1-ATPase. Incubation of the beta-subunit with DCCD and EEDQ eliminates its capacity to rebind to beta-less chromatophores. Consequently the DCCD or EEDQ-modified beta-subunit cannot restore ATP synthesis or hydrolysis activities to the beta-less chromatophores. The interaction of the isolated beta-subunit with DCCD and EEDQ is both time and concentration dependent. The elimination of the reconstitutive activity of the beta-subunit by DCCD is accompanied with a covalent binding of about 1 mol of [14C]DCCD/mol of beta and is pH-dependent, showing a half-maximal effect at about pH 7.4. Divalent cations, inorganic phosphate, and to a lesser extent ATP and ADP decrease the binding stoichiometry of DCCD to the beta-subunit. Pretreatment of either RrF1 or its isolated beta-subunit with EEDQ reduces drastically their ability to bind [14C]DCCD, suggesting that in both RrF1 and the beta-subunit, EEDQ and DCCD might react at the same site. The similar effect of the carboxyl group reagents on RrF1 and on its isolated beta-subunit is in accord with the suggestion that DCCD and EEDQ affect the F1-ATPases by interacting with their beta-subunits.  相似文献   

10.
In a previous report (J. Biol. Chem. 258 (1983) 3565–3570) we have demonstrated that the disulfide-reducing agent dithiothreitol has two effects on the sodium-dependent outer cortical brush border membrane d-glucose transporter; the first results in a reversible increase in the affinity of the transporter for the non-transported competitive inhibitor phlorizin, while the second results in a partially reversible loss of phlorizin binding and glucose-transport activity. Evidence was presented that both of these effects are the result of the reduction of disulfide bonds on the transport molecule. In the present paper we extend our observations on the inactivation of the transporter by dithiothreitol. We provide evidence here (i) that the inactivation of the transporter by dithiothreitol is independent of the effect of the reducing agent on the affinity of the transporter, (ii) that this inactivation process is first-order in dithiothreitol and thus presumably due to the reduction of a single disulfide bond essential to the functioning of the transporter. (iii) that it is the reduction of this disulfide bond and not some subsequent conformational or other change in the transporter which results in its inactivation, (iv) that phlorizin and substrates of the transporter provide protection against inactivation by dithiothreitol and that the degree of protection provided correlates well with the known specificity and phlorizin-binding properties of the transporter, and (iv) that the reactivity of the transporter with dithiothreitol is pH-dependent, decreasing with increasing pH over the pH range 6.5–8.5. We conclude that this site of action of dithiothreitol is a single essential disulfide bond intimately associated with the glucose-binding site on the transport molecule.  相似文献   

11.
A tyrosine group has been identified at, or near, the Na+-binding site of the Na+/glucose and Na+/proline cotransporters of rabbit intestinal brush-borders. Three tyrosine group-specific reagents, n-acetylimidazole, tetranitromethane, and p-nitrobenzene sulfonyl fluoride, were used to evaluate the role of tyrosyl groups in Na+-dependent glucose transport, Na+-dependent phlorizin binding, and the Na+-induced fluorescence quenching of fluorescein isothiocyanate bound to the glucose site of the carrier. All three reagents inhibited glucose transport, phlorizin binding, and fluorescein isothiocyanate quenching by 50-85% with Ki values in the range 7-50 microM. The presence of Na+ during the exposure of membranes to the reagents completely protected against inhibition, the Na+ concentration required to produce 50% protection was 14-36 mM. Fluorescent derivatives of n-acetylimidazole were synthesized to identify the tyrosyl residues on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. A total of five polypeptide bands were labeled with eosin or fluorescein n-acetylimidazole in a Na+-sensitive manner. Two of these bands, previously identified as the glucose (75,000-dalton) and proline (100,000-dalton) binding sites of the glucose and proline carriers, account for 50% of the Na+-sensitive tyrosyl residues. On the basis of these studies, we believe that the Na+/glucose cotransporter contains both the Na+ and glucose active sites on the same polypeptide or that the cotransporter consists of two similar polypeptides, each containing one substrate binding site.  相似文献   

12.
D C Phelps  Y Hatefi 《Biochemistry》1984,23(26):6340-6344
N,N'-Dicyclohexylcarbodiimide (DCCD) inhibits the mitochondrial energy-linked nicotinamidenucleotide transhydrogenase (TH). Our studies [Phelps, D.C., & Hatefi, Y. (1981) J. Biol. Chem. 256, 8217-8221; Phelps, D.C., & Hatefi, Y. (1984) Biochemistry 23, 4475-4480] suggested that the inhibition site of DCCD is near the NAD(H) binding site, because NAD(H) and competitive inhibitors protected TH against inhibition by DCCD and, unlike the unmodified TH, the DCCD-modified TH did not bind to NAD-agarose. Others [Pennington, R.M., & Fisher, R.R. (1981) J. Biol. Chem. 256, 8963-8969] could not demonstrate protection by NADH, obtained data indicating DCCD inhibits proton translocation by TH much more than hydride ion transfer from NADPH to 3-acetylpyridine adenine dinucleotide (AcPyAD), and concluded that DCCD modifies an essential residue in the proton channel of TH. The present studies show that N-(ethoxycarbonyl)-2-ethoxy-1,2-dihydroquinoline (EEDQ) also inhibits TH. The inhibition is pseudo first order at several EEDQ concentrations, and the reaction order with respect to [EEDQ] is unity, suggesting that inhibition involves the interaction of one molecule of EEDQ with one active unit of TH. The EEDQ-modified TH reacts covalently with [3H]aniline, suggesting that the residue modified by EEDQ is a carboxyl group. More significantly, it has been shown that the absorbance change of oxonol VI at 630 minus 603 nm is a reliable reporter of TH-induced membrane potential formation in submitochondrial particles and that TH-catalyzed hydride ion transfer from NADPH to AcPyAD and the membrane potential induced by this reaction are inhibited in parallel by either DCCD or EEDQ.  相似文献   

13.
The addition of a carboxyl-modifying reagent N,N'-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide (DCCD) to thiamine-binding protein isolated from rice bran resulted in a remarkable loss of its binding activity with [14C]thiamine. Thiamine and chloroethylthiamine substantially protected the protein against inactivation by DCCD, whereas thiamine phosphates did not. Another carboxyl reagent N-ethoxycarbonyl-2-ethoxy-1,2-dihydroquinoline (EEDQ) also inactivated rice bran thiamine-binding protein. Inactivation of the thiamine-binding protein was accompanied by covalent binding of DCCD to the protein as shown by the use of [14C]DCCD. The binding of [14C]DCCD to the thiamine-binding protein was specific, and significantly inhibited by the addition of thiamine. The loss of thiamine-binding activity was proportional to the specific binding of [14C]DCCD. For complete inactivation of the thiamine-binding activity, the binding of 2.46 mol of [14C]DCCD per mol of thiamine-binding protein was required. Furthermore, limited proteolysis of the binding protein by trypsin yielded two polypeptides with molecular weights of 35,000 (large polypeptide) and 12,500 (small polypeptide) which were separated by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The binding sites of [14C]DCCD were found to be located on the large polypeptide. These results suggest that a specific carboxyl residue in the large polypeptide releasable from rice bran thiamine-binding protein by trypsin digestion when modified by DCCD is involved in the binding of thiamine.  相似文献   

14.
Summary Sodium tetrathionate reacts with the glucose carrier of human erythrocytes at a rate which is greatly altered in the presence of competitive inhibitors of glucose transport. Inhibitors bound to the carrier on the outer surface of the membrane, either at the substrate site (maltose) or at the external inhibition site (phloretin and phlorizin), more than double the reaction rate. Inhibitors bound at the internal inhibition site (cytochalasin B and androstenedione), protect the system against tetrathionate. After treatment with tetrathionate, the maximum transport rate falls to less than one-third, and the properties of the binding sites are modified in unexpected ways. The affinity of externally bound inhibitors rises: phloretin is bound up to seven times more strongly and phlorizin and maltose twice as strongly. The affinity of cytochalasin B, bound at the internal inhibition site, falls to half while that of androstenedione is little changed. The affinity of external glucose falls slightly. Androstenedione prevents both the fall in transport activity and the increase in phloretin affinity produced by tetrathionate. An inhibitor of anion transport has no effect on the reaction. The observations support the following conclusions: (1) Tetrathionate produces its effects on the glucose transport system by reacting with the carrier on the outer surface of the membrane. (2) The carrier assumes distinct inward-facing and outward-facing conformations, and tetrathionate reacts with only the outward-facing form. (3) The thiol group with which tetrathionate is presumed to react is not present in either the substrate site or the internal or external inhibitor site. (4) In binding asymmetrically to the carrier, a reversible inhibitor shifts the carrier partition between inner and outer forms and thereby raises or lowers the rate of tetrathionate reaction with the system. (5) Reaction with tetrathionate converts the carrier to an altered state in which the conformation at all three binding sites is changed and the rate of carrier reorientation is reduced.  相似文献   

15.
Summary The inactivation of the rabbit parotid Na/K/Cl cotransporter by the irreversible sulfhydryl reagent N-ethylmaleimide (NEM) is studied by monitoring its effect on high affinity bumetanide binding to the carrier. NEM reduces the number of bumetanide binding sites with no significant change in the affinity of those remaining. NEM also reduces KCl-dependent22Na flux via the cotransporter by the same factor as the reduction in bumetanide binding sites. Both bumetanide and its analogue furosemide can protect against the effect of NEM. The concentration range over which this protection occurs is in good agreement with affinities of these two compounds for the high affinity bumetanide binding site (2.6 and 85 m, respectively), indicating an association of this site with the site of action of NEM. Also consistent with this hypothesis are the observations that (i) sodium and potassium, both of which are required for high affinity bumetanide binding, increase the rate of inactivation of binding by NEM and (ii) chloride, at concentrations previously shown to competitively inhibit bumetanide binding, protects the cotransporter against NEM. The effects of NEM on bumetanide binding are mimicked by another highly specific sulfhydryl reagent, methyl methanethiolsulfonate. The apparent rate constant for inactivation of high affinity bumetanide binding by NEM is a hyperbolic function of NEM concentration consistent with a model in which the inactivation reaction is first order in [NEM] and proceeds through an intermediate adsorptive complex. The data indicate that the presence of a reduced sulfhydryl group at or closely related to the bumetanide binding site is essential for the operation of the parotid Na/K/Cl cotransporter.  相似文献   

16.
Treatment of purified ATPase of the thermophilic bacterium PS-3 with the arginine reagent phenylglyoxal or with Woodward's reagent K, gave complete inactivation of the enzyme. The inactivation rates followed apparent first-order kinetics. The apparent order of reaction with respect to inhibitor concentrations gave values near to 1 with both reagents, suggesting that inactivation was a consequence of modifying one arginine or carboxyl group per active site. ADP and ATP strongly protected the thermophilic ATPase against both reagents. GDP and IDP protected less, whilst CTP did not protect. Experiments in which the incorporation of [14C]phenylglyoxal into the enzyme was measured show that extrapolation of incorporation to 100% inactivation of the enzyme gives 8-9 mol [14C]phenylglyoxal per mol ATPase, whilst ADP or ATP prevent modification of about one arginine per mol.  相似文献   

17.
The pressor enzyme renin from the mouse submaxillary gland was inactivated rapidly by diazoacetyl-D,L-norleucine methyl ester in the presence of cupric ion. The ion was essential to this reaction. The complete inactivation was obtained by the stoichiometric reaction of the reagent as indicated by the stoichiometric incorporation of norleucine into the renin molecule. The incorporated norleucine could be removed by treatment with 0.2 M hydroxylamine in 8 M urea indicating that a carboxyl group presumably essential for catalysis was esterified by the aliphatic diazo reagent. Renin from the hog kidney was also inactivated completely by a similar reaction. Since the requirement of cupric ion in the inactivation by aliphatic diazo compound is the most notable specific feature of acidic proteases, it is proposed that renin have a catalytic site similar to those of acidic proteases and that renin belongs to the family of acidic proteases, though its specificity determining site may be somewhat different.  相似文献   

18.
We studied the effect of the carboxyl group-specific reagent N,N'-dicyclohexylcarbodiimide on the Na+/H+ exchanger present in microvillus membrane vesicles isolated from rabbit renal cortices. Pretreatment of membrane vesicles with dicyclohexylcarbodiimide resulted in irreversible inhibition of Na+/H+ exchange which was not due to vesicle disruption or collapse of imposed pH gradients. Inhibition by dicyclohexylcarbodiimide followed pseudo-first-order kinetics, resulted primarily from a decrease in binding affinity for substrate, was pH-dependent in a manner consistent with reaction with carboxyl groups, and was greater than inhibition by hydrophilic carbodiimides. Substrates Na+ and Li+ and the competitive inhibitor amiloride protected against inhibition by dicyclohexylcarbodiimide in a pH-dependent fashion. Finally, we demonstrated amiloride-sensitive covalent binding of radiolabeled dicyclohexylcarbodiimide to a 100-kDa protein. In conclusion, a catalytically important carboxyl group is located in a relatively hydrophobic microenvironment at or near the external transport site of the renal Na+/H+ exchanger; and the transporter itself, or a subunit thereof, may be a 100-kDa protein.  相似文献   

19.
Ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase from spinach was inactivated by a carboxyl-directed reagent, Woodward's reagent K ( WRK ). The inactivation followed pseudo-first-order kinetics. The reaction order with respect to inactivation by WRK was 1.1, suggesting that inactivation was the consequence of modifying a single residue per active site. The substrate ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate (RBP), two competitive inhibitors, fructose 1,6-bisphosphate (FBP) and sedoheptulose 1,7-bisphosphate (SBP), and a number of sugars-phosphate protected against inactivation by WRK . SBP was a strong protector, displaying a dissociation constant (Kd) of 3 microM with native RBP carboxylase. Pretreatment of RBP carboxylase with diethyl pyrocarbonate prevented WRK incorporation into the enzyme. The enol ester derivative produced by reaction of WRK with RBP carboxylase has a maximal absorbance at 346 nm, and the extinction coefficient was found to be 12300 +/- 700 M-1 cm-1. Spectrophotometric titration of the number of carboxyl groups modified by WRK in RBP carboxylase/oxygenase in the presence and in the absence of SBP suggests that inactivation was associated with the modification of one carboxyl group per active site.  相似文献   

20.
Ionization effects on the binding of the potential transition state analogues 2-phosphoglycolate and 2-phosphoglycolohydroxamate appear to be attributable to the changing state of ionization of the ligands themselves, therefore it is unnecessary to postulate the additional involvement of an ionizing residue at the active site of triosephosphate isomerase to explain the influence of changing pH on Ki in the neutral range. The binding of the competitive inhibitor inorganic sulfate is insensitive to changing pH in the neutral range. 3-Chloroacetol sulfate, synthesized as an active-site-specific reagent for triosephosphate isomerase, is used to provide an indication of the pKa of the essential carboxyl group of this enzyme. Previously described active-site-specific reagents for the isomerase were phosphate esters, and their changing state of ionization (accompanied by possible changes in their affinity for the active site) may have complicated earlier attempts to determine the pKa of the essential carboxyl group from the pH dependence of the rate of inactivation. Being a strong monoprotic acid, chloroacetol sulfate is better suited to the determination of the pKa of the carboxyl group. Chloroacetol sulfate inactivates triosephosphate isomerase by the selective esterification of the same carboxyl group as that which is esterified by the phosphate esters described earlier. From the pH dependence of the rate of inactivation of yeast triosephosphate isomerase, the apparent pKa of the active-site carboxyl group is estimated as 3.9 +/- 0.1.  相似文献   

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